{OT} -- Computer Problem
#241
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: {OT} -- Computer Problem -- UPDATE, FIXED (I think)
Well, I have had no success on my update. I cannot get the nvidia
drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
Oh well.
Mike
Jeff Strickland wrote:
>
> "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
> news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
>> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
>> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
>> of different tasks.
>>
>> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
>> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
>> faster.
>>
>> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
>> what my strategy will be.
>>
>> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
>> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
>> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
>> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
>> will restore from.
>>
>> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
>>
>
> I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
> ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
> Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
> Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
> uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
> it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
> (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
> tolerate the pain that long).
>
> Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
> license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
> after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
>
> I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
> wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
> "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
>
>
> NEW QUESTION
> The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
> can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
> to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
> other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
> like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
> Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
> I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
> "dummies" in the title ...)
>
>
>
>
>
drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
Oh well.
Mike
Jeff Strickland wrote:
>
> "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
> news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
>> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
>> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
>> of different tasks.
>>
>> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
>> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
>> faster.
>>
>> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
>> what my strategy will be.
>>
>> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
>> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
>> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
>> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
>> will restore from.
>>
>> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
>>
>
> I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
> ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
> Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
> Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
> uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
> it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
> (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
> tolerate the pain that long).
>
> Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
> license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
> after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
>
> I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
> wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
> "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
>
>
> NEW QUESTION
> The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
> can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
> to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
> other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
> like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
> Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
> I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
> "dummies" in the title ...)
>
>
>
>
>
#242
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: {OT} -- Computer Problem -- UPDATE, FIXED (I think)
MIke
I have a ASUS 440BX motherboard on my home-bulit pc with an NVida G
force2 AGP card.
While it's an old machine with only 386mb ram running windowes xp it
does now sound as slow as what your describe.
I'm using these drivers
Nv4_mini.sys
Nv4-disp.dll
Drivers are dated 4/7/04
Not sure if the drivers for xp and 98 are the same
Mike Romain wrote:
> Well, I have had no success on my update. I cannot get the nvidia
> drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
> even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
> way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
>
> The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
>
> Oh well.
>
> Mike
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
> >
> > "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
> > news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
> >> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
> >> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
> >> of different tasks.
> >>
> >> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
> >> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
> >> faster.
> >>
> >> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
> >> what my strategy will be.
> >>
> >> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
> >> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
> >> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
> >> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
> >> will restore from.
> >>
> >> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
> >>
> >
> > I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
> > ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
> > Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
> > Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
> > uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
> > it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
> > (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
> > tolerate the pain that long).
> >
> > Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
> > license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
> > after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
> >
> > I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
> > wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
> > "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
> >
> >
> > NEW QUESTION
> > The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
> > can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
> > to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
> > other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
> > like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
> > Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
> > I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
> > "dummies" in the title ...)
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
I have a ASUS 440BX motherboard on my home-bulit pc with an NVida G
force2 AGP card.
While it's an old machine with only 386mb ram running windowes xp it
does now sound as slow as what your describe.
I'm using these drivers
Nv4_mini.sys
Nv4-disp.dll
Drivers are dated 4/7/04
Not sure if the drivers for xp and 98 are the same
Mike Romain wrote:
> Well, I have had no success on my update. I cannot get the nvidia
> drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
> even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
> way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
>
> The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
>
> Oh well.
>
> Mike
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
> >
> > "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
> > news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
> >> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
> >> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
> >> of different tasks.
> >>
> >> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
> >> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
> >> faster.
> >>
> >> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
> >> what my strategy will be.
> >>
> >> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
> >> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
> >> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
> >> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
> >> will restore from.
> >>
> >> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
> >>
> >
> > I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
> > ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
> > Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
> > Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
> > uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
> > it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
> > (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
> > tolerate the pain that long).
> >
> > Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
> > license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
> > after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
> >
> > I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
> > wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
> > "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
> >
> >
> > NEW QUESTION
> > The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
> > can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
> > to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
> > other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
> > like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
> > Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
> > I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
> > "dummies" in the title ...)
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
#243
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: {OT} -- Computer Problem -- UPDATE, FIXED (I think)
MIke
I have a ASUS 440BX motherboard on my home-bulit pc with an NVida G
force2 AGP card.
While it's an old machine with only 386mb ram running windowes xp it
does now sound as slow as what your describe.
I'm using these drivers
Nv4_mini.sys
Nv4-disp.dll
Drivers are dated 4/7/04
Not sure if the drivers for xp and 98 are the same
Mike Romain wrote:
> Well, I have had no success on my update. I cannot get the nvidia
> drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
> even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
> way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
>
> The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
>
> Oh well.
>
> Mike
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
> >
> > "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
> > news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
> >> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
> >> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
> >> of different tasks.
> >>
> >> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
> >> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
> >> faster.
> >>
> >> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
> >> what my strategy will be.
> >>
> >> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
> >> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
> >> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
> >> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
> >> will restore from.
> >>
> >> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
> >>
> >
> > I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
> > ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
> > Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
> > Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
> > uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
> > it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
> > (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
> > tolerate the pain that long).
> >
> > Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
> > license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
> > after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
> >
> > I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
> > wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
> > "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
> >
> >
> > NEW QUESTION
> > The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
> > can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
> > to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
> > other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
> > like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
> > Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
> > I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
> > "dummies" in the title ...)
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
I have a ASUS 440BX motherboard on my home-bulit pc with an NVida G
force2 AGP card.
While it's an old machine with only 386mb ram running windowes xp it
does now sound as slow as what your describe.
I'm using these drivers
Nv4_mini.sys
Nv4-disp.dll
Drivers are dated 4/7/04
Not sure if the drivers for xp and 98 are the same
Mike Romain wrote:
> Well, I have had no success on my update. I cannot get the nvidia
> drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
> even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
> way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
>
> The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
>
> Oh well.
>
> Mike
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
> >
> > "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
> > news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
> >> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
> >> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
> >> of different tasks.
> >>
> >> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
> >> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
> >> faster.
> >>
> >> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
> >> what my strategy will be.
> >>
> >> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
> >> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
> >> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
> >> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
> >> will restore from.
> >>
> >> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
> >>
> >
> > I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
> > ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
> > Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
> > Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
> > uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
> > it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
> > (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
> > tolerate the pain that long).
> >
> > Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
> > license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
> > after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
> >
> > I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
> > wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
> > "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
> >
> >
> > NEW QUESTION
> > The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
> > can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
> > to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
> > other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
> > like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
> > Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
> > I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
> > "dummies" in the title ...)
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
#244
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: {OT} -- Computer Problem -- UPDATE, FIXED (I think)
MIke
I have a ASUS 440BX motherboard on my home-bulit pc with an NVida G
force2 AGP card.
While it's an old machine with only 386mb ram running windowes xp it
does now sound as slow as what your describe.
I'm using these drivers
Nv4_mini.sys
Nv4-disp.dll
Drivers are dated 4/7/04
Not sure if the drivers for xp and 98 are the same
Mike Romain wrote:
> Well, I have had no success on my update. I cannot get the nvidia
> drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
> even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
> way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
>
> The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
>
> Oh well.
>
> Mike
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
> >
> > "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
> > news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
> >> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
> >> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
> >> of different tasks.
> >>
> >> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
> >> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
> >> faster.
> >>
> >> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
> >> what my strategy will be.
> >>
> >> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
> >> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
> >> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
> >> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
> >> will restore from.
> >>
> >> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
> >>
> >
> > I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
> > ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
> > Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
> > Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
> > uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
> > it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
> > (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
> > tolerate the pain that long).
> >
> > Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
> > license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
> > after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
> >
> > I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
> > wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
> > "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
> >
> >
> > NEW QUESTION
> > The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
> > can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
> > to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
> > other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
> > like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
> > Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
> > I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
> > "dummies" in the title ...)
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
I have a ASUS 440BX motherboard on my home-bulit pc with an NVida G
force2 AGP card.
While it's an old machine with only 386mb ram running windowes xp it
does now sound as slow as what your describe.
I'm using these drivers
Nv4_mini.sys
Nv4-disp.dll
Drivers are dated 4/7/04
Not sure if the drivers for xp and 98 are the same
Mike Romain wrote:
> Well, I have had no success on my update. I cannot get the nvidia
> drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
> even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
> way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
>
> The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
>
> Oh well.
>
> Mike
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
> >
> > "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
> > news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
> >> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
> >> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
> >> of different tasks.
> >>
> >> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
> >> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
> >> faster.
> >>
> >> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
> >> what my strategy will be.
> >>
> >> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
> >> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
> >> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
> >> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
> >> will restore from.
> >>
> >> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
> >>
> >
> > I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
> > ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
> > Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
> > Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
> > uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
> > it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
> > (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
> > tolerate the pain that long).
> >
> > Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
> > license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
> > after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
> >
> > I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
> > wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
> > "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
> >
> >
> > NEW QUESTION
> > The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
> > can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
> > to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
> > other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
> > like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
> > Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
> > I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
> > "dummies" in the title ...)
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
#245
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: {OT} -- Computer Problem -- UPDATE, FIXED (I think)
MIke
I have a ASUS 440BX motherboard on my home-bulit pc with an NVida G
force2 AGP card.
While it's an old machine with only 386mb ram running windowes xp it
does now sound as slow as what your describe.
I'm using these drivers
Nv4_mini.sys
Nv4-disp.dll
Drivers are dated 4/7/04
Not sure if the drivers for xp and 98 are the same
Mike Romain wrote:
> Well, I have had no success on my update. I cannot get the nvidia
> drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
> even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
> way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
>
> The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
>
> Oh well.
>
> Mike
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
> >
> > "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
> > news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
> >> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
> >> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
> >> of different tasks.
> >>
> >> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
> >> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
> >> faster.
> >>
> >> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
> >> what my strategy will be.
> >>
> >> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
> >> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
> >> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
> >> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
> >> will restore from.
> >>
> >> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
> >>
> >
> > I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
> > ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
> > Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
> > Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
> > uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
> > it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
> > (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
> > tolerate the pain that long).
> >
> > Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
> > license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
> > after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
> >
> > I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
> > wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
> > "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
> >
> >
> > NEW QUESTION
> > The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
> > can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
> > to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
> > other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
> > like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
> > Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
> > I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
> > "dummies" in the title ...)
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
I have a ASUS 440BX motherboard on my home-bulit pc with an NVida G
force2 AGP card.
While it's an old machine with only 386mb ram running windowes xp it
does now sound as slow as what your describe.
I'm using these drivers
Nv4_mini.sys
Nv4-disp.dll
Drivers are dated 4/7/04
Not sure if the drivers for xp and 98 are the same
Mike Romain wrote:
> Well, I have had no success on my update. I cannot get the nvidia
> drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
> even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
> way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
>
> The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
>
> Oh well.
>
> Mike
>
> Jeff Strickland wrote:
> >
> > "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
> > news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
> >> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
> >> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
> >> of different tasks.
> >>
> >> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
> >> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
> >> faster.
> >>
> >> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
> >> what my strategy will be.
> >>
> >> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
> >> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
> >> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
> >> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
> >> will restore from.
> >>
> >> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
> >>
> >
> > I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
> > ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
> > Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
> > Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
> > uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
> > it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
> > (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
> > tolerate the pain that long).
> >
> > Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
> > license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
> > after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
> >
> > I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
> > wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
> > "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
> >
> >
> > NEW QUESTION
> > The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
> > can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
> > to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
> > other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
> > like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
> > Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
> > I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
> > "dummies" in the title ...)
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
#246
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: {OT} -- Computer Problem -- UPDATE, FIXED (I think)
I tried and tried over the last few days to get mine running. I have
the ASUS CUV4X board with the VIA chipset trying to run two different
flavors of AGP cards. One is the Nvidia TNT 128 and the other is the
Nvidia Geforce2 MX/MX 400.
I tried installing the newest VIA chipset drivers and AGP driver from
ASUS and made sure my bios was the latest. No go.
It is totally insane the speed difference using the old PCI trident S3
card. For the first time in years I could even go online while my
Norton antivirus was doing it's sweep last night and it acted like a
computer should, not having to wait 30 seconds or more for each inch of
mouse travel, let along being able to open a screen instantly instead of
having time to brew coffee.
Mike
ufatbastehd wrote:
> MIke
>
> I have a ASUS 440BX motherboard on my home-bulit pc with an NVida G
> force2 AGP card.
> While it's an old machine with only 386mb ram running windowes xp it
> does now sound as slow as what your describe.
>
> I'm using these drivers
> Nv4_mini.sys
> Nv4-disp.dll
> Drivers are dated 4/7/04
>
> Not sure if the drivers for xp and 98 are the same
>
>
>
>
>
> Mike Romain wrote:
>> Well, I have had no success on my update. I cannot get the nvidia
>> drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
>> even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
>> way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
>>
>> The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
>>
>> Oh well.
>>
>> Mike
>>
>> Jeff Strickland wrote:
>>> "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
>>> news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
>>>> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
>>>> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
>>>> of different tasks.
>>>>
>>>> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
>>>> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
>>>> faster.
>>>>
>>>> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
>>>> what my strategy will be.
>>>>
>>>> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
>>>> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
>>>> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
>>>> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
>>>> will restore from.
>>>>
>>>> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
>>>>
>>> I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
>>> ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
>>> Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
>>> Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
>>> uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
>>> it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
>>> (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
>>> tolerate the pain that long).
>>>
>>> Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
>>> license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
>>> after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
>>>
>>> I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
>>> wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
>>> "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
>>>
>>>
>>> NEW QUESTION
>>> The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
>>> can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
>>> to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
>>> other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
>>> like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
>>> Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
>>> I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
>>> "dummies" in the title ...)
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>
the ASUS CUV4X board with the VIA chipset trying to run two different
flavors of AGP cards. One is the Nvidia TNT 128 and the other is the
Nvidia Geforce2 MX/MX 400.
I tried installing the newest VIA chipset drivers and AGP driver from
ASUS and made sure my bios was the latest. No go.
It is totally insane the speed difference using the old PCI trident S3
card. For the first time in years I could even go online while my
Norton antivirus was doing it's sweep last night and it acted like a
computer should, not having to wait 30 seconds or more for each inch of
mouse travel, let along being able to open a screen instantly instead of
having time to brew coffee.
Mike
ufatbastehd wrote:
> MIke
>
> I have a ASUS 440BX motherboard on my home-bulit pc with an NVida G
> force2 AGP card.
> While it's an old machine with only 386mb ram running windowes xp it
> does now sound as slow as what your describe.
>
> I'm using these drivers
> Nv4_mini.sys
> Nv4-disp.dll
> Drivers are dated 4/7/04
>
> Not sure if the drivers for xp and 98 are the same
>
>
>
>
>
> Mike Romain wrote:
>> Well, I have had no success on my update. I cannot get the nvidia
>> drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
>> even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
>> way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
>>
>> The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
>>
>> Oh well.
>>
>> Mike
>>
>> Jeff Strickland wrote:
>>> "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
>>> news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
>>>> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
>>>> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
>>>> of different tasks.
>>>>
>>>> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
>>>> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
>>>> faster.
>>>>
>>>> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
>>>> what my strategy will be.
>>>>
>>>> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
>>>> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
>>>> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
>>>> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
>>>> will restore from.
>>>>
>>>> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
>>>>
>>> I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
>>> ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
>>> Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
>>> Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
>>> uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
>>> it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
>>> (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
>>> tolerate the pain that long).
>>>
>>> Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
>>> license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
>>> after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
>>>
>>> I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
>>> wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
>>> "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
>>>
>>>
>>> NEW QUESTION
>>> The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
>>> can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
>>> to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
>>> other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
>>> like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
>>> Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
>>> I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
>>> "dummies" in the title ...)
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>
#247
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: {OT} -- Computer Problem -- UPDATE, FIXED (I think)
I tried and tried over the last few days to get mine running. I have
the ASUS CUV4X board with the VIA chipset trying to run two different
flavors of AGP cards. One is the Nvidia TNT 128 and the other is the
Nvidia Geforce2 MX/MX 400.
I tried installing the newest VIA chipset drivers and AGP driver from
ASUS and made sure my bios was the latest. No go.
It is totally insane the speed difference using the old PCI trident S3
card. For the first time in years I could even go online while my
Norton antivirus was doing it's sweep last night and it acted like a
computer should, not having to wait 30 seconds or more for each inch of
mouse travel, let along being able to open a screen instantly instead of
having time to brew coffee.
Mike
ufatbastehd wrote:
> MIke
>
> I have a ASUS 440BX motherboard on my home-bulit pc with an NVida G
> force2 AGP card.
> While it's an old machine with only 386mb ram running windowes xp it
> does now sound as slow as what your describe.
>
> I'm using these drivers
> Nv4_mini.sys
> Nv4-disp.dll
> Drivers are dated 4/7/04
>
> Not sure if the drivers for xp and 98 are the same
>
>
>
>
>
> Mike Romain wrote:
>> Well, I have had no success on my update. I cannot get the nvidia
>> drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
>> even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
>> way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
>>
>> The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
>>
>> Oh well.
>>
>> Mike
>>
>> Jeff Strickland wrote:
>>> "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
>>> news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
>>>> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
>>>> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
>>>> of different tasks.
>>>>
>>>> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
>>>> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
>>>> faster.
>>>>
>>>> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
>>>> what my strategy will be.
>>>>
>>>> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
>>>> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
>>>> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
>>>> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
>>>> will restore from.
>>>>
>>>> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
>>>>
>>> I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
>>> ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
>>> Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
>>> Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
>>> uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
>>> it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
>>> (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
>>> tolerate the pain that long).
>>>
>>> Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
>>> license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
>>> after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
>>>
>>> I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
>>> wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
>>> "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
>>>
>>>
>>> NEW QUESTION
>>> The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
>>> can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
>>> to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
>>> other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
>>> like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
>>> Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
>>> I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
>>> "dummies" in the title ...)
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>
the ASUS CUV4X board with the VIA chipset trying to run two different
flavors of AGP cards. One is the Nvidia TNT 128 and the other is the
Nvidia Geforce2 MX/MX 400.
I tried installing the newest VIA chipset drivers and AGP driver from
ASUS and made sure my bios was the latest. No go.
It is totally insane the speed difference using the old PCI trident S3
card. For the first time in years I could even go online while my
Norton antivirus was doing it's sweep last night and it acted like a
computer should, not having to wait 30 seconds or more for each inch of
mouse travel, let along being able to open a screen instantly instead of
having time to brew coffee.
Mike
ufatbastehd wrote:
> MIke
>
> I have a ASUS 440BX motherboard on my home-bulit pc with an NVida G
> force2 AGP card.
> While it's an old machine with only 386mb ram running windowes xp it
> does now sound as slow as what your describe.
>
> I'm using these drivers
> Nv4_mini.sys
> Nv4-disp.dll
> Drivers are dated 4/7/04
>
> Not sure if the drivers for xp and 98 are the same
>
>
>
>
>
> Mike Romain wrote:
>> Well, I have had no success on my update. I cannot get the nvidia
>> drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
>> even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
>> way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
>>
>> The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
>>
>> Oh well.
>>
>> Mike
>>
>> Jeff Strickland wrote:
>>> "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
>>> news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
>>>> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
>>>> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
>>>> of different tasks.
>>>>
>>>> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
>>>> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
>>>> faster.
>>>>
>>>> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
>>>> what my strategy will be.
>>>>
>>>> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
>>>> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
>>>> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
>>>> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
>>>> will restore from.
>>>>
>>>> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
>>>>
>>> I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
>>> ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
>>> Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
>>> Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
>>> uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
>>> it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
>>> (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
>>> tolerate the pain that long).
>>>
>>> Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
>>> license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
>>> after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
>>>
>>> I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
>>> wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
>>> "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
>>>
>>>
>>> NEW QUESTION
>>> The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
>>> can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
>>> to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
>>> other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
>>> like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
>>> Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
>>> I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
>>> "dummies" in the title ...)
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>
#248
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: {OT} -- Computer Problem -- UPDATE, FIXED (I think)
I tried and tried over the last few days to get mine running. I have
the ASUS CUV4X board with the VIA chipset trying to run two different
flavors of AGP cards. One is the Nvidia TNT 128 and the other is the
Nvidia Geforce2 MX/MX 400.
I tried installing the newest VIA chipset drivers and AGP driver from
ASUS and made sure my bios was the latest. No go.
It is totally insane the speed difference using the old PCI trident S3
card. For the first time in years I could even go online while my
Norton antivirus was doing it's sweep last night and it acted like a
computer should, not having to wait 30 seconds or more for each inch of
mouse travel, let along being able to open a screen instantly instead of
having time to brew coffee.
Mike
ufatbastehd wrote:
> MIke
>
> I have a ASUS 440BX motherboard on my home-bulit pc with an NVida G
> force2 AGP card.
> While it's an old machine with only 386mb ram running windowes xp it
> does now sound as slow as what your describe.
>
> I'm using these drivers
> Nv4_mini.sys
> Nv4-disp.dll
> Drivers are dated 4/7/04
>
> Not sure if the drivers for xp and 98 are the same
>
>
>
>
>
> Mike Romain wrote:
>> Well, I have had no success on my update. I cannot get the nvidia
>> drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
>> even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
>> way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
>>
>> The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
>>
>> Oh well.
>>
>> Mike
>>
>> Jeff Strickland wrote:
>>> "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
>>> news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
>>>> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
>>>> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
>>>> of different tasks.
>>>>
>>>> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
>>>> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
>>>> faster.
>>>>
>>>> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
>>>> what my strategy will be.
>>>>
>>>> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
>>>> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
>>>> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
>>>> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
>>>> will restore from.
>>>>
>>>> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
>>>>
>>> I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
>>> ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
>>> Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
>>> Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
>>> uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
>>> it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
>>> (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
>>> tolerate the pain that long).
>>>
>>> Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
>>> license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
>>> after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
>>>
>>> I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
>>> wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
>>> "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
>>>
>>>
>>> NEW QUESTION
>>> The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
>>> can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
>>> to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
>>> other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
>>> like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
>>> Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
>>> I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
>>> "dummies" in the title ...)
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>
the ASUS CUV4X board with the VIA chipset trying to run two different
flavors of AGP cards. One is the Nvidia TNT 128 and the other is the
Nvidia Geforce2 MX/MX 400.
I tried installing the newest VIA chipset drivers and AGP driver from
ASUS and made sure my bios was the latest. No go.
It is totally insane the speed difference using the old PCI trident S3
card. For the first time in years I could even go online while my
Norton antivirus was doing it's sweep last night and it acted like a
computer should, not having to wait 30 seconds or more for each inch of
mouse travel, let along being able to open a screen instantly instead of
having time to brew coffee.
Mike
ufatbastehd wrote:
> MIke
>
> I have a ASUS 440BX motherboard on my home-bulit pc with an NVida G
> force2 AGP card.
> While it's an old machine with only 386mb ram running windowes xp it
> does now sound as slow as what your describe.
>
> I'm using these drivers
> Nv4_mini.sys
> Nv4-disp.dll
> Drivers are dated 4/7/04
>
> Not sure if the drivers for xp and 98 are the same
>
>
>
>
>
> Mike Romain wrote:
>> Well, I have had no success on my update. I cannot get the nvidia
>> drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
>> even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
>> way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
>>
>> The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
>>
>> Oh well.
>>
>> Mike
>>
>> Jeff Strickland wrote:
>>> "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
>>> news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
>>>> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
>>>> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
>>>> of different tasks.
>>>>
>>>> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
>>>> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
>>>> faster.
>>>>
>>>> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
>>>> what my strategy will be.
>>>>
>>>> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
>>>> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
>>>> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
>>>> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
>>>> will restore from.
>>>>
>>>> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
>>>>
>>> I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
>>> ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
>>> Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
>>> Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
>>> uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
>>> it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
>>> (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
>>> tolerate the pain that long).
>>>
>>> Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
>>> license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
>>> after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
>>>
>>> I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
>>> wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
>>> "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
>>>
>>>
>>> NEW QUESTION
>>> The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
>>> can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
>>> to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
>>> other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
>>> like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
>>> Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
>>> I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
>>> "dummies" in the title ...)
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>
#249
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: {OT} -- Computer Problem -- UPDATE, FIXED (I think)
I tried and tried over the last few days to get mine running. I have
the ASUS CUV4X board with the VIA chipset trying to run two different
flavors of AGP cards. One is the Nvidia TNT 128 and the other is the
Nvidia Geforce2 MX/MX 400.
I tried installing the newest VIA chipset drivers and AGP driver from
ASUS and made sure my bios was the latest. No go.
It is totally insane the speed difference using the old PCI trident S3
card. For the first time in years I could even go online while my
Norton antivirus was doing it's sweep last night and it acted like a
computer should, not having to wait 30 seconds or more for each inch of
mouse travel, let along being able to open a screen instantly instead of
having time to brew coffee.
Mike
ufatbastehd wrote:
> MIke
>
> I have a ASUS 440BX motherboard on my home-bulit pc with an NVida G
> force2 AGP card.
> While it's an old machine with only 386mb ram running windowes xp it
> does now sound as slow as what your describe.
>
> I'm using these drivers
> Nv4_mini.sys
> Nv4-disp.dll
> Drivers are dated 4/7/04
>
> Not sure if the drivers for xp and 98 are the same
>
>
>
>
>
> Mike Romain wrote:
>> Well, I have had no success on my update. I cannot get the nvidia
>> drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
>> even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
>> way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
>>
>> The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
>>
>> Oh well.
>>
>> Mike
>>
>> Jeff Strickland wrote:
>>> "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
>>> news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
>>>> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
>>>> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
>>>> of different tasks.
>>>>
>>>> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
>>>> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
>>>> faster.
>>>>
>>>> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
>>>> what my strategy will be.
>>>>
>>>> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
>>>> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
>>>> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
>>>> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
>>>> will restore from.
>>>>
>>>> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
>>>>
>>> I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
>>> ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
>>> Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
>>> Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
>>> uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
>>> it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
>>> (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
>>> tolerate the pain that long).
>>>
>>> Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
>>> license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
>>> after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
>>>
>>> I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
>>> wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
>>> "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
>>>
>>>
>>> NEW QUESTION
>>> The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
>>> can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
>>> to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
>>> other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
>>> like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
>>> Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
>>> I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
>>> "dummies" in the title ...)
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>
the ASUS CUV4X board with the VIA chipset trying to run two different
flavors of AGP cards. One is the Nvidia TNT 128 and the other is the
Nvidia Geforce2 MX/MX 400.
I tried installing the newest VIA chipset drivers and AGP driver from
ASUS and made sure my bios was the latest. No go.
It is totally insane the speed difference using the old PCI trident S3
card. For the first time in years I could even go online while my
Norton antivirus was doing it's sweep last night and it acted like a
computer should, not having to wait 30 seconds or more for each inch of
mouse travel, let along being able to open a screen instantly instead of
having time to brew coffee.
Mike
ufatbastehd wrote:
> MIke
>
> I have a ASUS 440BX motherboard on my home-bulit pc with an NVida G
> force2 AGP card.
> While it's an old machine with only 386mb ram running windowes xp it
> does now sound as slow as what your describe.
>
> I'm using these drivers
> Nv4_mini.sys
> Nv4-disp.dll
> Drivers are dated 4/7/04
>
> Not sure if the drivers for xp and 98 are the same
>
>
>
>
>
> Mike Romain wrote:
>> Well, I have had no success on my update. I cannot get the nvidia
>> drivers to work on my system so an AGP fast graphics card will work. I
>> even got the chipset update for the board and the newest drivers and no
>> way. It is a slow pig when it even will boot up.
>>
>> The old Trident PCI video card works at light speed in comparison.
>>
>> Oh well.
>>
>> Mike
>>
>> Jeff Strickland wrote:
>>> "Jeff Strickland" <crwlr@verizon.net> wrote in message
>>> news:KBPrh.21233$wq.14150@trndny07...
>>>> I (my brother in law, really) have a computer that has a SERIOUS case
>>>> of The Slows. It takes FOREVER to open apps, and complete any number
>>>> of different tasks.
>>>>
>>>> It is an off-brand box that came from Fry's (I think). I don't recall
>>>> what the architecture is, but I'm pretty sure my 286-based laptop was
>>>> faster.
>>>>
>>>> The computer is on its way to my house for a checkout. I'm not sure
>>>> what my strategy will be.
>>>>
>>>> The machine has a valid version of XP Home edition, but I do not know
>>>> if it has the Restore CD or not. Can I use a different copy of XP to
>>>> do restore operations? I assume that I have to use the Key Code that
>>>> is on the computer, not the one that belongs to the copy of XP that I
>>>> will restore from.
>>>>
>>>> Do not hesitate to offer suggestions on what to do ...
>>>>
>>> I found a couple of legacy programs that should have uninstalled long
>>> ago. They still remain in the Add or Remove Programs section of the
>>> Control Panel, and they would not go away from there. I went into the
>>> Registry and removed all of the "calls" to the errant programs, then I
>>> uninstalled McAfee Internet Security Suite. Now the machine works like
>>> it should. Since we last talked, I've loaded a dozen CDs into iTunes
>>> (this is a project that would have taken days, assuming one would
>>> tolerate the pain that long).
>>>
>>> Somebody here offered up WinASO as a Registry Cleaner. I bought a 5-site
>>> license and am pleased with the product. Well, as pleased as one can be
>>> after messing with something for a couple of hours. Thanks for that ...
>>>
>>> I cleaned up hundreds of "registry errors" in three machines so far, my
>>> wife's machine had 1750 total errors, more than 200 of them ranked as
>>> "serious" by WinASO Registry Optimizer.
>>>
>>>
>>> NEW QUESTION
>>> The Registry has a structure. Are there any resources out there where I
>>> can look up what the structure is, and then I would be able to do stuff
>>> to the Registry with less stress. I've done surgery to the Registry on
>>> other machines, and on one I turned the machine into a paper wieght. I'd
>>> like to understand what I'm looking at when I poke around in the
>>> Registry. I'm thinking a book titled Registry for Dummies would be what
>>> I am looking for. (I resist the temptation to buy anything with
>>> "dummies" in the title ...)
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>